| Literature DB >> 25304386 |
Jed D Gonzalo1, Brian S Heist, Briar L Duffy, Liselotte Dyrbye, Mark J Fagan, Gary Ferenchick, Heather Harrell, Paul A Hemmer, Walter N Kernan, Jennifer R Kogan, Colleen Rafferty, Raymond Wong, Michael D Elnicki.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Competency-based medical education increasingly recognizes the importance of observation, feedback, and reflection for trainee development. Although bedside rounds provide opportunities for authentic workplace-based implementation of feedback and team-based reflection strategies, this relationship has not been well described. The authors sought to understand the content and timing of feedback and team-based reflection provided by bedside teachers in the context of patient-centered bedside rounds.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25304386 PMCID: PMC4198734 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-14-212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Timing, location, and content of bedside teachers’ feedback to trainees in the context of bedside rounds (n= 111 coding references)
| Timing (Location) | Frequency of code references – n (%) a | Representative content discussed | Content category b |
|---|---|---|---|
| During bedside encounter (bedside) | 14 (13) | Insufficient physical examination performed during admission. | HCP |
| Physical examination instruction or correction. | HCP | ||
| Positive feedback on history obtained. | HCP | ||
| Positive feedback on superior case presentation. | HCP | ||
| Clinical reasoning or care delivered. | CDM | ||
| Immediately following bedside encounter (hallway) | 48 (43) | Lengthy and wordy case presentations, with suggestions for improvement. | HCP |
| Review success of bedside case presentations. | HCP | ||
| Trainee struggling with summary statement, suggestions for improvement. | HCP | ||
| Clinical reasoning and decision-making, with suggestions for improvement. | CDM | ||
| Trainees not informing patient about what they are doing, e.g. physical exam. | PCC | ||
| Trainee not speaking to comfort level of patient. | PCC | ||
| Trainee using (in)appropriate terminology at patient level. | PCC | ||
| Trainee hovering over patient during encounter. | PCC | ||
| Successful patient-centered communication demonstrated by team member(s). | PCC | ||
| Residents’ demonstration of a great teaching point at bedside. | LT | ||
| After bedside rounding sessions (private) | 30 (27) | Deficiencies in note writing and history obtained. | HCP |
| Missed important aspect of a patient’s past medical history. | CDM | ||
| Medical jargon used inappropriately in front of patient. | PCC | ||
| Trainee’s ability/deficiency to ask a patient a very sensitive question. | PCC | ||
| Trainee’s response and way of “dealing with” an angry patient. | PCC | ||
| Deficiencies/absence of providing student/intern feedback about presentations. | LT | ||
| Educational skills with student/intern. | LT | ||
| Efficiency skills in coordinating team bedside rounds. | LT | ||
| Lack of leadership role in bedside encounter(s). | LT | ||
| A concerning interaction or unprofessional behavior/event with a patient. | P | ||
| Mid/end-of- rotation (private) | 19 (17) | Case presentations performed at bedside. | HCP |
| Leadership skills in leading rounds and bedside encounters. | LT | ||
| Assessment of core competencies on formal evaluations. | (all) |
aCode references indicate the number of times the code was “referenced” in the analysis. For example, if feedback during the bedside encounter was discussed in detail, the code may have been referenced more than once.
bContent category: HCP - history-taking, case-presentation, physical-examination skills, CDM – clinical decision-making and care delivery, PCC - patient-centered communication, LT - leadership and teaching skills, P – professionalism.
General taxonomy of situations occurring during bedside encounters triggering team-based reflection (n= 47 total coding references)
| Category | Frequency of code references – n(%) a | Representative examples |
|---|---|---|
| Patients’ characteristics or emotions | 29 (62) | A patient who was emotional about his/her disease or prognosis. |
| A patient who was anxious or uncomfortable about his/her diagnosis or bedside event. | ||
| A patient who didn’t seem happy with the whole group coming to the bedside. | ||
| A patient who didn’t seem to want to answer any questions in front of the team. | ||
| A patient who seemed angry about an issue/event. | ||
| A combative/“difficult” patient. | ||
| Social aspects of the patient’s case explaining what is going on. | ||
| Patient with “excruciating pain” but wearing make-up/eyeliner. | ||
| Patient’s understanding of disease process/hospitalization. | ||
| Patient’s response to breaking of bad news. | ||
| Trainees’ actions or emotions | 12 (26) | Team’s incorrect diagnosis on a newly admitted patient. |
| Initial bedside encounters for trainees new to the activity. | ||
| Resident or team not acquiring an adequate history, resulting in missed diagnoses. | ||
| Resident or team communicating the diagnosis of a new cancer to the patient. | ||
| Resident or team communicating “bad news” to a patient. | ||
| Resident or team response to a hostile family member. | ||
| Resident or team demonstration of patient-centered communication skills. | ||
| Team’s feelings regarding consulting specialist’s recommendations. | ||
| Team’s feelings regarding event occurring at the bedside (e.g. encountering a difficult patient). | ||
| Attending physician Role modeling | 6 (13) | Attending physician “setting limits” and “sticking to his guns” with a patient who acts out. |
| Attending physicians clinical reasoning demonstrated at bedside. | ||
| Attending physician’s communication skills at bedside, what went well and did not go well. | ||
| Attending physician’s bedside demonstration of counseling a patient about his/her disease. |
aCode references indicate the number of times the code was “referenced” in the analysis. For example, if reflection associated with a patient-related characteristic was discussed in detail, the code may have been referenced more than once.